Key Rating Drivers & Detailed Description
Strengths:
- Strategic importance to, and expectation of strong support from, L&T
LTF has demonstrated a healthy growth over the past few fiscals, while maintaining a stable profitability. As part of L&T’s focus on building a strong services portfolio including IT, technology and financial services, LTF has remained a key focus area of the parent. L&T provides strategic oversight to the entity and has personnel from its senior management on the board of LTF. For instance, Mr S N Subrahmanyan (chairman & managing director, L&T) is a non-executive director and chairperson on the board of LTF whereas Mr R Shankar Raman (president, whole-time director and chief financial officer, L&T) is another non-executive director. The parent also has representation in some of the key committees of the company, such as asset-liability and risk management committees. LTF also benefits from the synergies, extensive experience and expertise of L&T, especially in infrastructure and real estate lending. The parentage of L&T, along with the brand name, also supports the resource profile.
Furthermore, the parent provides has infused equity capital at periodic intervals in LTF (infused ~Rs 1,900 crore in fiscal 2021 and Rs 2,000 crore in fiscal 2018). In the past, L&T has also extended a line of credit to LTF, to be used during contingency. Capital support from the parent, along with internal cash accrual, is expected to keep capitalisation adequate with gearing not expected to exceed 7.5 times on a steady-state basis.
This demonstration of financial support is reflected in the parent’s intention to (i) maintain strategic linkages and management oversight so that, among others, LTF conducts its business in a manner such that it honors its stakeholder obligations in a timely manner (ii) maintain majority shareholding in LTF, and (iii) provide growth and risk capital, if and when required.
The financial services business is expected to remain one of the key focus areas for L&T, which should continue to support LTF.
- Strong and diversified presence across the lending segment
Post the scheme of amalgamation coming into effect, LTF has been operating as a retail-focused NBFC and, has built a strong market position with AUM of Rs 88,717 crore (with retail book of Rs 84,444 crore) as on June 30, 2024. Growth in AUM remains modest at 13% year-on-year (y-o-y) in Q1FY25 as compared to 6% in fiscal 2024 and a decline of 8% in fiscal 2023, owing to an accelerated sell down of the legacy wholesale portfolio – the share of which declined from 47% of the overall advances to 5% between March 2022 and June 2024. The effect of this was partly offset by a strong growth in retail portfolio. For Q1FY25, retail loans grew at 31% (y-o-y) as against 31% for fiscal 2024 and 35% for fiscal 2023.
The company has been focused on increasing the degree of digital integration in all its functional areas including sourcing, underwriting, disbursement, servicing and collections. LTF deployed its beta version of ‘Project Cyclops’, an underwriting engine, which is currently launched in a pilot mode for its two-wheeler segment, that shall further improve their credit underwriting capabilities. LTF is extensively using its large customer base of ~2.4 crore through multiple channels, to enhance customer engagement and drive successful conversions, thus creating cross-selling and upselling opportunities. The growth in the retail segments has also been supported by enhanced digital presence (e.g., PLANET App.) and usage of data analytics.
LTF’s retail portfolio is divided into four main categories; 1. Farmer finance (16% of AUM as on June 30, 2024) 2. Rural business loans & micro finance loans (29%) 3. Urban finance consisting of two-wheeler finance (14%), personal loans (8%), home loans (18%), loan against property (5%) and 4. Small and medium enterprise (SME) finance (5%). Business momentum across all segments remains strong on account of steady urban consumption and increasing rural consumption. The remaining wholesale lending book of the entity comprises infrastructure finance (2%) and real estate finance (3%) as of June 30, 2024.
Retail portfolio at ~Rs 84,444 crore (95% of overall loan book) as on June 30, 2024, has exhibited steady growth momentum over the past few quarters. Quarterly disbursement towards this segment were Rs 14,839 crore (Q1FY25), higher by 33% y-o-y (Rs 54,267 crore in fiscal 2024 as compared to Rs 42,065 crore for the previous fiscal).
Going forward, the business growth is expected to pick up and be driven by consistent focus on the retail (including SME finance) segment.
- Well-diversified resource profile
Resource profile is spread across capital markets and bank funding. The company is prominent issuer in the capital markets and has long established banking relationships as well. Of the total borrowing of Rs 80,295 crore as on June 30, 2024, NCDs (including retail), commercial paper, external commercial borrowing, bank borrowings, financial institution and others formed 34%, 8%, 1%, 56% (priority sector lending [PSL] 23% and non-PSL 28%), 5% and 1%, respectively. The diversity in resource profile aids the company’s ability to raise funds at competitive pricing. For Q1FY25, average borrowing cost[1] was 6.9% (annualised; 6.9% for fiscal 2024), which was lower than most peers. L&T’s parentage also supports the resource profile of LTF.
Weakness:
- Moderate, albeit improving, asset quality
Asset quality indicators, though moderate, have gradually improved in the recent past. Gross stage-3 (GS-3) and net stage-3 (NS-3) stood at 3.14% and 0.79%, respectively as June 30, 2024 (3.15% and 0.79% as March 31, 2024), improved from 4.97% and 1.57% on March 31, 2021 – supported by stronger collection efficiency, controlled slippages, higher recoveries and write offs. As on June 30, 2024, provisioning coverage ratio for GS-3 was at 75% as compared to 76%, a quarter ago. In the retail portfolio, asset quality has shown sequential improvement with GS-3 and NS-3 of 2.79% and 0.62%, respectively as on June 30, 2024, having improved from 3.21% and 0.70% as on June 30, 2023. Furthermore, the higher focus on retail loans, stronger underwriting and collection practices, better early warning systems and focus on digitisation and data analytics should continue to support asset quality.
Furthermore, wholesale book continues to rundown, particularly after the accelerated sell-own in fiscal 2023, and forms 5% of the AUM. The net security receipt book stands at Rs 6,770 crore (7% of AUM) as on March 31, 2024. The provisions created for wholesale portfolio as part of the accelerated sell-down strategy can potentially cover the incremental provisioning requirement. The company has also created a macroprudential provisions for retail portfolio; the stage 2 provisions (including macroprudential provisions) accounted for 69% (March 2024) of the Gross stage-2 retail assets.
CRISIL Ratings takes note of the recent growth in retail portfolio with better asset quality in their established products - rural group loans and micro finance, farm equipment financing, two wheeler financing and home loans. While the SME (4.5% of AUM as of March 2024) and personal loans (7.5% of AUM as of March 2024) have also contributed to the overall growth, these two segments are yet to go through economic cycles. Ability of the management to keep the asset quality metrics under check as recently scaled portfolios season and go through economic cycles, while the overall business continues to grow at a healthy pace, will remain a key monitorable.